Generation and Ritual among young Shias in the UK

Key information

Date
Time
5:00 pm to 6:30 pm
Venue
Russell Square: College Buildings

About this event

Kathryn Spellman Poots, Associate professor, Aga Khan University - Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations

Shia Muslims make up approximately fifteen percent of the estimated 2.8 million Muslims living in the UK, and come from a range of backgrounds including South Asian, East African, Iranian, Iraqi, Afghani, Lebanese, Bahraini, Saudi Arabian, and Yemeni. This paper will discuss the development of local and transnational Shi’a institutions and religious practices in British society. It will take a gendered and generational look at the various ways that young people from Shia Muslim backgrounds find ways of reworking and harmonising customary practices in relation the social realities and daily experience of life in British society. Focusing specifically on the local and transnational manifestations of the Ashura ritual, marriage customs, as well as funeral and mourning rituals, the session will explore various ways in which young British Shia explore and question normative gender roles and relations.

Loading the player...

Kathryn Spellman Poots: Generation & Ritual among young Shias in the UK

Biography

Kathryn Spellman Poots received her MSc and PhD in Politics and Sociology from Birkbeck College, University of London. Her areas of interest include gender and Islam in the Middle East and North Africa, the Iranian Diaspora and transnational migration networks, Islam in Europe and gender and religious practices in contemporary Libyan society. Her publications include Ethnographies of Islam: Ritual Performances and Everyday Practices (ed., University of Edinburgh Press, 2012) and Religion and Nation: Iranian Local and Transnational Networks in Britain (Berghahn Publishers, Oxford and New York, 2005). Dr Spellman previously taught courses on the sociology of religion, migration and gender in contemporary societies at Syracuse University, London campus. She is currently a Research Associate at the London Middle East Institute at SOAS and on the Editorial Board of the Middle East in London magazine. She has been involved in organisations that focus on the experiences of refugees and asylum seekers in the UK, including the London Detainee Support Group.

Organiser: Bloomsbury Gender Network hosted by the SOAS Centre for Gender Studies

Contact email: rs94@soas.ac.uk